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Best 12V Fans for Caravans: Sirocco, Maxxair, and More Compared
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Best 12V Fans for Caravans: Sirocco, Maxxair, and More Compared

February 3, 20268 min readBy KamperHub Team
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Best 12V Fans for Caravans: A Complete Buyer's Guide

A good 12V fan is one of the best upgrades you can make to your caravan. Whether you're parked up in 35-degree heat with no powered site or just want airflow while sleeping, the right fan makes a huge difference to comfort.

But there's a wide range out there — from $20 clip-ons to $180 marine-grade units — and the price doesn't always match the performance. Here's a straight-up comparison of the most popular 12V fans used in Australian caravans.


The Fans: Head-to-Head Comparison

Caframo Sirocco II

The Sirocco is the fan most people recommend in caravan forums, and for good reason.

SpecDetail
Price$130–$180
Voltage12V DC
Speeds6 (variable)
Current draw0.1A (low) to 0.4A (high)
MountGimbal (tilts and swivels 360 degrees)
NoiseVery quiet — barely audible on low
BuildMarine-grade, designed for boats and RVs

What's good: The Sirocco is genuinely quiet. On the lowest setting you can barely hear it, which matters when you're trying to sleep. The gimbal mount lets you point it anywhere, and the 6-speed variable control gives you fine adjustment. Power draw is minimal — you can run 4 of them all night and barely touch your battery.

What's not: The price. At $130 to $180 per fan before installation, fitting out your van with 4 of them costs serious money. The fan head is also relatively small (18cm), so airflow coverage per fan is limited compared to larger units.

Best for: Bedroom use where silence matters most. Permanent installations.


Maxxair MaxxFan

A solid mid-range option that's popular with budget-conscious caravanners.

SpecDetail
Price$80–$130
Voltage12V DC
Speeds3–4 (model dependent)
Current draw~0.15A (low) to ~0.5A (high)
MountWall/ceiling mount with tilt
NoiseModerate — noticeable on high
BuildRV-specific design

What's good: Decent airflow at a lower price point than the Sirocco. Well-built and designed for RV use. Easy to find in Australian caravan accessory stores.

What's not: Louder than the Sirocco, especially on higher speeds. Fewer speed settings means less fine control. The mount isn't as flexible as the Sirocco's gimbal.

Best for: Daytime use in the dinette or kitchen. Good value if noise isn't your priority.


Aussie Traveller 12V Fan

An Australian brand offering a range of 12V fans for caravans and campers.

SpecDetail
Price$60–$100
Voltage12V DC
Speeds2–3
Current draw~0.2A to ~0.5A
MountClip-on or screw mount
NoiseModerate
BuildPlastic body, oscillating models available

What's good: Affordable and available at most caravan shops and online retailers in Australia. Oscillating models cover a wider area. The clip-on versions need no permanent installation.

What's not: Build quality is a step below the Sirocco and Maxxair. Noisier motor. The clip-on mounts can feel flimsy and may not grip well on all surfaces.

Best for: Budget setups, temporary use, or as a second fan to supplement a quieter primary fan.


Generic 12V Clip-On Fans (eBay/Amazon)

The cheap option you'll find everywhere online.

SpecDetail
Price$15–$50
Voltage12V DC
Speeds2 (usually just low/high)
Current draw~0.3A to ~0.8A
MountClip-on, adhesive, or suction cup
NoiseLoud — motor whine and blade noise
BuildBasic plastic, variable quality

What's good: They're cheap. If you need airflow right now and don't want to spend much, they'll move air.

What's not: Everything else. They're noisy, the motors burn out, the clips break, and they often draw more power than better fans while moving less air. You'll likely replace them within a year or two.

Best for: Emergencies. Temporary use while you save for something better.


USB Rechargeable Fans

A growing category that avoids 12V wiring entirely.

SpecDetail
Price$25–$80
VoltageUSB charging (internal lithium battery)
Speeds3–4
Runtime4–12 hours depending on speed and battery
MountClip-on, desk stand, or hanging hook
NoiseQuiet to moderate
BuildPlastic, compact

What's good: No wiring at all. Charge them from USB (solar panel, power bank, or any USB outlet) and put them anywhere. Great for taking outside under the awning or into the tent if the kids are camping alongside. Some models have surprisingly good airflow.

What's not: Limited runtime on higher speeds. You need to remember to charge them. Not a replacement for a permanently mounted fan in the bedroom, but excellent as a supplementary fan.

Best for: Awning use, outdoor dining, kids' tents, and anywhere you don't have a 12V socket handy.


Full Comparison Table

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FanPriceNoisePower DrawMount StyleSpeedsBest For
Caframo Sirocco II$130–$180Very quiet0.1–0.4AGimbal (360)6Bedroom, permanent install
Maxxair MaxxFan$80–$130Moderate0.15–0.5AWall/ceiling tilt3–4Dinette, kitchen
Aussie Traveller$60–$100Moderate0.2–0.5AClip/screw2–3Budget permanent
Generic clip-on$15–$50Loud0.3–0.8AClip/suction2Temporary, emergency
USB rechargeable$25–$80Quiet–moderateN/A (battery)Clip/stand/hook3–4Outdoor, portable

How Many Fans Do You Need?

Most caravanners put fans in two areas:

  • Bedroom — For sleeping comfort (essential in summer)
  • Dinette/living area — For daytime airflow

The Setup Most People End Up With

  • 2 fans at the bed (one per person) — hardwired for convenience
  • 1–2 fans at the dinette — either hardwired or plug-in

The question is whether you need fans in both areas at the same time. At night, you're in the bedroom. During the day, you're at the dinette or outside. If you rarely use both simultaneously, you can save money by having 2 plug-in fans that move between locations instead of fitting 4 permanent ones.


Hardwired vs Plug-In: Which Setup?

Hardwired

  • Always ready, no fuss
  • Neat hidden wiring
  • Higher installation cost ($100–$300 per fan)
  • Permanent position

Plug-In (12V Socket)

  • Cheaper — buy fewer fans and move them
  • Flexible — take them under the awning or anywhere
  • Need 12V sockets in each location
  • Visible cables

The Hybrid Approach

The sweet spot for most people: hardwire your bedroom fans (you want zero effort at bedtime) and use plug-in fans for the dinette that can be moved to the awning, kitchen, or anywhere else.


Installation Costs

ComponentCost Range
Sirocco II (fan only)$130–$180
Professional installation per fan$100–$300
12V socket installation$50–$100 per socket
DIY wiring (materials only)$20–$40

If your builder is quoting $400 to $450 per fan installed during a new build, that's on the higher side but not unusual. Ask for a cost breakdown — fan vs labour — so you can compare. You may save by supplying the fans yourself.

Tip for new builds: Ask the builder to pre-wire 12V sockets in every location you might want a fan, even if you only install 2 now. Pre-wiring during a build is cheap. Retrofitting later means pulling panels apart.


Power Draw: Will Fans Flatten Your Battery?

Even the hungriest fans use very little power. Running 4 Sirocco fans on high for 8 hours overnight uses roughly 15Ah — a tiny fraction of most caravan battery setups (100–200Ah). Power draw is not a real concern with any quality 12V fan.


Our Verdict

  • Best overall: Caframo Sirocco II — quiet, efficient, well-built, worth the price for bedroom use
  • Best value: Maxxair MaxxFan — solid performance at a mid-range price
  • Best budget: Aussie Traveller — gets the job done without breaking the bank
  • Best portable: USB rechargeable — no wiring, use anywhere
  • Skip: Generic clip-on fans — noisy, unreliable, false economy

If budget allows, put Siroccos in the bedroom and a mid-range fan at the dinette. If not, 2 Maxxair fans will serve you well for half the cost.


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Useful Resources

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